Deben Bhattacharya Explained

Deben Bhattacharya
Birth Date:1921
Birth Place:Benares, India
Occupation:Radio producer, record producer, ethnomusicologist, anthropologist, documentary filmmaker, photographer, translator, poet, writer, broadcaster, lecturer, and folk music consultant

Deben Bhattacharya (1921–2001) was a Bengali radio producer, record producer, ethnomusicologist, anthropologist, documentary filmmaker, photographer, translator, poet, writer, broadcaster, lecturer, and folk music consultant. He produced over 100 records, 23 films and published more than a dozen books in his lifetime and much of his work was carried out under the auspices of UNESCO.[1]

Early life

Bhattacharya was born to an old Bengali Brahmin family that was settled in Benares for over 130 years. As a young man, he was influenced by the work of English poet Lewis Thompson, which prompted him to move to England, where he worked for the BBC as a radio producer. Knowing a lot of Indians in London, he started to record Indian musicians on a Baird tape recorder. When Bhattacharya had the idea to do field recordings in India, he was met with a financial dilemma of needing £80 for the tape recorder, £20 for the transformer, £25 for 20 blank tapes, plus about £60 for a one-way boat ticket to Bombay. Sunday Wilson – a producer for the overseas service, commissioned him for six five-minute programmes, which garnered £30.6.0. Weeks after that, the poet Stephen Spender, who had started his new magazine Encounter, approached Bhattacharya to write an article on Indian poetry and advance him on two further articles. The London-based company Argo Records Ltd. that specialized in classical music also advanced £25 and paid for the Gaumont-British machine, and the tapes against future royalties. He returned with enough material to make four or five records, and one of them was published, called "Songs from Bombay". This led to a trip through the Middle East, recording music in every country, as well as other projects.[2]

Career

Bhattacharya continued to earn international recognition as an expert on ethnic folk music, dance and poetry and was employed to help teach ethnic music and bring ethnic musicians to Sweden. Living for periods of time in London and Stockholm he began making films in 1962 when his BBC Third Programme producer, Robert Leighton, introduced him to David Attenborough, who was then an executive at BBC Television. When Bhattacharya told him that he would be going to India with an experienced cameraman, Attenborough offered him £1,000 to help with his expenses. Upon his return, the BBC edited the material into two films: Kathakali, the classical dance drama of South India, and Storytellers From Rajastan. Following this, Swedish Television gave him money to make a film in Hungary. This led to film making in Romania, Tibet, China, Bangladesh, Nepal and many other countries. Towards the end of his career, Bhattacharya had archived over 16,000 photographs related to his various projects.[3]

Partial filmography

Partial discography

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Liner notes, Argo LP ZFB 52 "Songs of Krishna", 1971.
  2. Web site: Deben Bhattacharya interviewed by Kevin Daly . www.kevindaly.org.uk . 17 February 2011.
  3. Web site: Music According to Deben Bhattacharya, a film by Stéphane Jourdain.. La Huit . 15 May 2014 . 22 March 2019.
  4. Web site: Results - British Universities Film & Video Council . British Universities Film & Video Council . 22 March 2019.
  5. Web site: Deben Bhattacharya filmography . www.allmovie.com . 17 February 2011.
  6. Web site: Deben Bhattacharya - BFI . https://web.archive.org/web/20190322021746/https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2ba36dee6e . dead . 22 March 2019 . BFI . 22 March 2019.